4.7 Article

The role of fundamentals and policy in New Zealand's carbon prices

Journal

ENERGY ECONOMICS
Volume 124, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.eneco.2023.106737

Keywords

New Zealand Emissions Trading Scheme; Carbon markets; Climate policy; Carbon emissions; Afforestation

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The New Zealand Emission Trading Scheme (NZ ETS) is unique in its inclusion of forestry as a carbon sink. The scheme has undergone multiple policy changes, including a shift from unlimited importation of units to complete self-reliance. Through empirical analysis, we found that international offsets had a negative impact on NZU returns before the de-link date, while domestic supply affected returns after the official de-link date. Surprisingly, green offsets, mainly from forestry, had a positive effect on NZU returns before the de-link date. Demand-side factors, such as sectoral effects, also played a significant role in NZU returns.
The New Zealand Emission Trading Scheme (NZ ETS) is unique in that it includes forestry as a carbon sink (a source of unit supply). Further, the NZ ETS has been subject to many policy changes including a switch from allowing unlimited importation of units to becoming completely autarkic. In this context, we analyse the pricing dynamics for New Zealand Units (NZUs) driven by the interaction between allowances supply and demand between 2010 and 2019 and for two sets of subperiods divided by the official and actual de-link dates. Our empirical models find that international offsets negatively affected NZU returns before the actual de-link date, domestic supply after the official de-link date, and banked units between the official and actual de-link dates, and that green (mainly forestry) offsets, surprisingly, positively affected NZU returns before the actual de-link date. Our results also highlight that from a demand perspective, sectoral effects had significant relationships with NZU returns with different dynamics. Namely, manufacturing and construction activities shifted to negatively affect NZU returns after the official de-link date, implying that fixed allocative baselines have resulted in overallocation over time. Stationary energy sector activities shifted from negatively to positively affecting NZU returns after the official de-link date probably due to their exploitation of unlimited international offset during the linking period.

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